Dear to whom this may concern,
I am doing a science project on URTD in the Desert Tortoise population. My project would be seeing the infection rate among turtles in urban population versus the rate found in those in a more rural area. I would also try to find possible sourecs in where Mycoplasma Agassizii could be found/be the possible bacterias location. However, in order to do my project, I would have to deal with many of the current hibernating desert tortoises in rural areas and in people's homes. I was wondering if there is a way to take nasal flushes without disturbing the tortoises in hibernation or if I might be able to wake them for a short period in order to take nasal flushes without hurting the tortoises.
Is it okay to do a nasal flush on an hibernating tortoise?
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URTDtortoise
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2011 11:52 pm
- Occupation: student
- Project Question: URTD in the Tucson Desert Toroise population and Possible Causes of an Mycoplasma Agassizii infection
- Project Due Date: n/a
- Project Status: I am just starting
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donnahardy2
- Former Expert
- Posts: 2671
- Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 12:45 pm
Re: Is it okay to do a nasal flush on an hibernating tortois
Hi,
This is a fascinating topic that is very worthwhile to study. I’m glad that you asked the question about taking samples from the tortoises while they are hibernating. Here is information from the Science Buddies website about projects involving vertebrate animals.
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... mals.shtml
You are only allowed to do projects that are non-invasive and non-intrusive, so you would not be allowed to take samples from the tortoises
Are you working in a lab with Mycoplasma? If you have access to a laboratory, perhaps there is another project you could do to work on this problem. Were you planning to try to culture the organism or do pcr? Doing a science project with this organism would require preapproval from your local scientific review committee before you start.
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... ents.shtml
Please let us know if you have more questions.
Donna Hardy
This is a fascinating topic that is very worthwhile to study. I’m glad that you asked the question about taking samples from the tortoises while they are hibernating. Here is information from the Science Buddies website about projects involving vertebrate animals.
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... mals.shtml
You are only allowed to do projects that are non-invasive and non-intrusive, so you would not be allowed to take samples from the tortoises
Are you working in a lab with Mycoplasma? If you have access to a laboratory, perhaps there is another project you could do to work on this problem. Were you planning to try to culture the organism or do pcr? Doing a science project with this organism would require preapproval from your local scientific review committee before you start.
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... ents.shtml
Please let us know if you have more questions.
Donna Hardy

